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Re: [TowerTalk] grounding questions

To: Rick Bullon <kc5ajx@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] grounding questions
From: Phil - KB9CRY <kb9cry@comcast.net>
Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2003 05:24:19 -0500
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
I'll take a stab at your questions. First I'm no expert but these guys are; read thoroughly through their technical articles on Ham Station grounding. http://www.polyphaser.com http://www.arraysolutions.com/Products/ice/index.html
Personally I use all ICE devices but both are the same.






I have the ground rods in at the tower running from each tower leg ( tower is Rohn 25), 1 st rod is 8' out and the other 2 are 16' apart altogether 40' from the tower to the last ground rod in each direction. On the ground rods running toward the shack I have the ground wire running toward the trench for the coax run and then ground rods every 16' to the box outside the shack.

Polyphaser suggests each tower leg ground radial be at least 75 ft long with ground rods spaced along that length as appropriate.




I have a metal box at the bottom of the tower and one outside the window of the shack ( I know I probably only need the one at the bottom of the tower but I want to be a safe as I can be as far as lightning).

No, the one just outside the shack is numero uno. You need to ground the coax shields at the tower but can do the rotator cables at the SPG (see below for SPG). Also, attach a wire from the mast to the tower, allow enough loop for rotator, just above the rotator to shunt any strike energy from the mast to the tower so it doesn't go through the rotator. I use a short piece of welding cable for this.





In each box are lightning arrestors( ICE units) for the coax runs and the control lines.

Overkill really. Call Mike at ICE and ask him if you'll be receiving the same coax shield protection by using a ICE device at the base of the tower rather than their coax shield grounding buss and adapter.


On each unit is a ground lug. Do I need to run wires from each of these lugs and then attach them to the lightning ground or are the units grounded though the metal boxes?

IF the units are bolted to the metal boxes then you don't need to mess with the lugs.




If the units are grounded thought the metal boxes then can I tie all the grounds on the control lines to these lugs and free up and extra terminal on the arrestors to use for the other control line coming in?

What do you mean by these this statement? I'm not following the process here.




These lugs don't look big enough to use the #6 wire I using on the rest on the lightning ground. What size wire is recommended?

Whenever I use these lugs I use #12 solid. #6 is a little small for the main grounding wire size. I use #4 bare solid (don't use stranded) for my main outdoor grounding wire. What size is being used to connect to each ground rod? Tie the tower grounding wire to the a lug on the metal box; that's how I tie mine together.




In the shack I have one #6 wire coming in that is grounded to a single separate ground rod out side. This is for the equipment grounds in the shack, again the ground terminals on all the equipment in the shack look to small to use this big wire. I was thinking would use a split copper bolt to attach smaller copper wires to this bigger wire is this the correct way?

If the shack grounding main wire is more than about four feet long, then you'll want to use a very low impedance wire. Some guys use 1-1/2 braid and some use large welding cable (made of hundreds of very small wires). Both of these types have far more wire surface area then #6 wire (energy flows on the outside of the wire and therefore you want to max out wire surface area). Personally I have both types for a shack ground, a braid and welding cable.




One more dumb question when running the wires from the equipment grounds to the ground wire coming into the the shack do I run 1 wire from each piece to the main wire or connect them from 1 piece of equipment to another then from the last piece of equipment to the main wire?
I think the right way is each piece of equipment to the main wire.

Use smaller wires from each piece of equipment (#14 or #12) and attach them to these wires.




I figure that since the ground wire coming from the tower to the shack is only a few feet from the single ground wire coming into the shack that I don't need to tie these together and I wrong here.

Yes, wrong. The tower grounding system, the metal boxes, the shack ground, and the electrical service grounds are all tied together at your SPG, single point ground, which should be another ground rod pounded in right outside the shack. The electrical service ground should be routed outside the house and should be large, I use #4 bare solid again.
Finally how do you attach your wire to the ground rods? If you use clamps, then you'll have to religiously go out and retighted them at least four times or more per year; believe me, they will loosen up with every thermal cycling of the weather. The best is to CadWeld. Go to www.erico.com or to http://www.harger.com/ and check out the OneShots or UniShots. These exothermic welds result in a weatherproof, maintenance free connection that you can bury with the ground rod.
Gd luck, sounds like you're on the right path. I never disconnect and never have had a problem. 73 Phil KB9CRY




And before anyone brings it up yes the ground wire is going to continue to the same point that the ac and telco lines are grounded to
Thanks and 73
Rick
KC5AJX


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_______________________________________________


See: http://www.mscomputer.com for "Self Supporting Towers", "Wireless Weather Stations", and lot's more. Call Toll Free, 1-800-333-9041 with any questions and ask for Sherman, W2FLA.

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